ISIS Releases Bloody New Video Singing ‘Kill Them All’ in U.S. and Other Countries

The Islamic State militant group (ISIS) released a graphic new video calling on its global support network to launch attacks across the world and especially in the West.

Facing widespread defeat in Iraq and Syria, tech-savvy jihadis have retained a powerful online presence, distributing daily digital publications detailing supposed successes in the Middle East and urging followers to stage attacks abroad, where ISIS-inspired violence has killed hundreds in recent years. The latest clip, released Friday by the group's official Al-Hayat Media Center, began with a narrator addressing viewers in Arabic over footage of attacks claimed by ISIS before an English-language hymn invited would-be attackers to oblige the group's violent, ultraconservative interpretation of Islam.

"To our brothers in aqidah [creed] and iman [faith], in Europe, America, Russia, Australia and elsewhere, your brothers in your lands have absolved themselves of blame, so leap onto their tracks and take an example from their actions, and know that jannah [paradise] is beneath the shadows of swords," the narrator read.

In this clip, taken from the recently released ISIS video "Answer the Call," an Arabic speaker calls upon jihadis in Europe, the U.S., Russia, Australia and elsewhere to launch attacks against civilians. Social Media

Footage that appeared to be taken from the March 22, 2017, Westminster Bridge attack showed emergency personnel tending to victims. Attacker Khalid Masood allegedly killed five people, in a vehicular ramming and knife attack, as revenge for Western intervention in the Middle East. Social Media

The introduction was read over scenes such as a video testimony by Anis Amri, who drove his truck into a Berlin Christmas market in 2016; an ISIS fighter showing off a decapitated head; and deadly attacks in France, Turkey and the U.K.

The clip also included handheld camera footage of last October's massacre at a country music festival in Las Vegas, perpetuating ISIS's claim that gunman Stephen Paddock had converted to Islam six months before committing the worst shooting in modern U.S. history and did so as a "soldier" of the group's self-proclaimed caliphate. ISIS has yet to provide any evidence of Paddock's ties to the group, and authorities have not revealed any information to support the jihadi claims.

Despite challenges to the theory's veracity, the group has continued to include the Las Vegas attack in its official propaganda. Following the Arabic-language beginning, Friday's video made an explosive transition to an English-language nasheed, or "chant," beckoning supporters to "answer the call" over scenes of extreme violence that concluded with severed heads rolling in slow motion.

"Go and answer the call, don't spare none, kill them all, it is now time to rise, slit their throats, watch them die," voices sang in the video. "The Islamic State stands, and it stands and demands that you worship the one whom besides there is none.

"We're the grandsons of men who gave all that they can to rule all of the lands with the law of Islam," they continued. "Holding up the flag high and seeking paradise, oh my brothers stay strong, victory won't be long."

ISIS vowed its self-styled caliphate "stands," but both Iraq and Syria have declared victory against it, leaving only pockets of jihadi-controlled territory. Social Media

The video, which could still be found Monday on Twitter despite the company's attempts to block and remove posts containing the link, showed high-definition footage of suicide bombings, gunfights and executions. Social Media

"Together we will stand up, once filled with iman, men who answered the call, terrorizing the world," the nasheed went on.

"Through our blood comes success, and we'll give it our best to destroy the kuffar [infidels], we will slaughter them all," the official ISIS clip continued. "So my brothers erupt, let the world know we're up, by the will of Allah, we will conquer the world."

The group has managed to maintain a modest presence elsewhere in Asia, where as recently as Monday it claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on a military academy in Kabul, Afghanistan, ABC News reported. However, the militants have struggled to assert their identity in the face of a resurgent local rival, the Taliban, which killed up to 150 people in a suicide ambulance bombing in the Afghan capital only days before.